Ginsburg Voices Support for #MeToo on Eve of Kavanaugh Hearing

Ginsburg Voices Support for #MeToo on Eve of Kavanaugh Hearing

September 26, 2018, 8:58 PM

Ginsburg Voices Support for #MeToo on Eve of Kavanaugh Hearing

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg smiles as she takes questions from first-year students at Georgetown Law, Sept. 26, 2018, in Washington.
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg smiles as she takes questions from first-year students at Georgetown Law, Sept. 26, 2018, in Washington.

WASHINGTON —

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg voiced support for the #MeToo movement Wednesday in a striking statement on the eve of a high-stakes U.S. Senate hearing into allegations of sexual misconduct by President Donald Trump’s nominee to the court, Brett Kavanaugh.

During a question-and-answer period after an address to first-year law students at Georgetown University in Washington, Ginsburg was asked if there was anything she was excited or disappointed about regarding the current women’s movement.

After discussing the problem of “unconscious bias” that leads to gender discrimination, she said she was “cheered on” by the #MeToo movement, a national reckoning with sexual assault and harassment that has brought down dozens of rich and powerful men.

“Every woman of my vintage has not just one story but many stories, but we thought there was nothing you could do about it — boys will be boys — so just find a way to get out of it,” said Ginsburg, 85.

Ginsburg said that the #MeToo movement showed women coming together in numbers.

“So it was one complaint and then one after another the complaints mounted. So women nowadays are not silent about bad behavior,” she said.

Ginsburg did not mention Kavanaugh or the women who have accused him of sexual misconduct.

During a Senate hearing Thursday, one accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, will testify about an alleged 1982 incident in which she said Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when both of them were in high school.

Two other women have come forward with allegations.

Kavanaugh, who was named by Trump to replace Justice Anthony Kennedy, who retired in July, has denied the allegations. The Supreme Court’s 2018 term officially begins on Oct. 1.

Original Article

WATCH TODAY'S STEVE GRUBER SHOW AT 6AM ET.

JOIN TODAY'S AMERICAN SUNRISE SHOW AT 8AM ET.

DON'T MISS TODAY'S MORNING EDITION OF WAR ROOM WITH STEVE BANNON

CATCH THE LATEST AMERICA'S VOICE LIVE SHOW

WATCH PRESIDENT TRUMP MAGA RALLY IN SCHNECKSVILLE, PA

JOIN US IN LIVE CHAT 24/7 ON RUMBLE

JOIN US ON OUR 24/7 LIVE RUMBLE STREAM